Chapter 3

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CHAPTER 3
National Income:
Where It Comes From and Where It Goes
A PowerPointTutorial
To Accompany
MACROECONOMICS, 7th. Edition
N. Gregory Mankiw
Tutorial written by:
Mannig J. Simidian
B.A. in Economics with Distinction, Duke University
1
M.P.A., Harvard University Kennedy School of Government
Chapter Three
M.B.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Sloan School of Management
®
®
It is a quite simple but powerful analytical model built around
buyers and sellers pursuing their own self-interest (within
rules set by government). It’s emphasis is on the consequences
of competition and flexible wages/prices for total employment
and real output. Its roots go back to 1776—to Adam Smith’s
Wealth of Nations. The Wealth of Nations suggested that the
economy was controlled by the “invisible hand” whereby the
market system, instead of government would be the best
mechanism for a healthy economy.
Copyright 1997 Dead Economists Society
Chapter Three
2
The heart of the market system lies in the
“market clearing” process and the
consequences of individuals pursuing selfinterest. In this module, we will develop a
basic classical model to explain various
economic interactions.
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neoclassical theory of distribution
We are going to examine carefully the modern theory of how
national income is distributed among the factors of production.
It is based on the classical (eighteenth-century) idea that prices adjust to
balance supply and demand, applied here to the markets for the
factors of production, together with the more recent (nineteenth-century)
idea that the demand for each factor of production depends on the
marginal productivity of that factor. Proceed to the next slide
to the “CLASSICAL FACTORY” to learn how to construct the
classical model.
4
Chapter Three
Welcome to...
The place where
Classical-model
mechanics
are made easy!
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S
P*
Chapter Three
D
Q* Q
5
We begin with firms and see what determines their
level of production (and thus, the level of national
income).
Then, we examine how the markets for the factors of
production distribute this income to households.
Next, we consider how much of this income
households consume and how much they save. We
will also discuss the demand arising from investment
and government purchases. Finally, we discuss how
the demand and supply for goods and services are
brought into balance.
Let’s begin!
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Chapter Three
An economy’s output of goods and services (GDP) depends on:
(1) quantity of inputs
(2) ability to turn inputs into output
Let’s go over both now.
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The factors of production are the inputs used to produce goods
and services. The two most important factors of production are
capital and labor. In this module, we will take these factors as
given (hence the overbar depicting that these values are fixed).
K (capital) = K
L (labor) = L
In this module, we’ll also assume that all resources are fully
utilized, meaning no resources are wasted.
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The available production technology determines how much output
is produced from given amounts of capital (K) and labor (L).
The production function represents the transformation of inputs
into outputs. A key assumption is that the production function
has constant returns to scale, meaning that if we increase inputs
by z, output will also increase by z.
We write the production function as:
Y = F (K,L)
Income
is some function of our given inputs
To see an example of a production function–let’s visit Mankiw’s
Bakery…
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The workers hired to
The kitchen and its
equipment are Mankiw’s make the bread are its
labor.
Bakery capital.
The loaves of bread
are its output.
Mankiw’s Bakery production function shows that the number of loaves
produced depends on the amount of the equipment and the number of
workers. If the production function has constant returns to scale, then
doubling the amount of equipment and the number of workers doubles
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the amount
of bread produced.
Chapter Three
We can now see that the factors of production and the production
function together determine the quantity of goods and services
supplied, which in turn equals the economy’s output. So,
Y = F (K,L)
=Y
In this section, because we assume that capital and labor are fixed,
we can also conclude that Y (output) is fixed as well.
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Recall that the total output of an economy equals total income.
Because the factors of production and the production function
together determine the total output of goods and services, they also
determine national income.
The distribution of national income is determined by factor prices.
Factor prices are the amounts paid to the factors of production—the
wages workers earn and the rent the owners of capital collect.
Because we have assumed a fixed amount of
capital and labor, the factor supply curve
is a vertical line.
The next slide will illustrate this.
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The price paid to any factor of production depends on the supply and
demand for that factor’s services. Because we have assumed that
the supply is fixed, the supply curve is vertical. The demand curve
is downward sloping. The intersection of supply and demand
determines the equilibrium factor price.
Factor
price
(Wage or
rental
rate)
Equilibrium
factor price
Chapter Three
Factor supply
This vertical supply curve
is a result of the
supply being fixed.
Factor demand
Quantity of factor
13
To make a product, the firm needs two factors of
production, capital and labor. Let’s represent the firm’s
technology by the usual production function:
Y = F (K, L)
The firm sells its output at price P, hires workers at a
wage W, and rents capital at a rate R.
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The goal of the firm is to maximize profit. Profit is revenue minus
cost. Revenue equals P × Y. Costs include both labor and capital
costs. Labor costs equal W × L, the wage multiplied by the amount
of labor L. Capital costs equal R × K, the rental price of capital R times
the amount of capital K.
Profit = Revenue - Labor Costs - Capital Costs
= PY WL
RK
Then, to see how profit depends on the factors of production, we use
production function Y = F (K, L) to substitute for Y to obtain:
Profit = P × F (K, L) - WL - RK
This equation shows that profit depends on P, W, R, L, and K. The
competitive firm takes the product price and factor prices as given
and chooses the amounts of labor and capital that maximize profit.15
Chapter Three
We know that the firm will hire labor
and rent capital in the quantities that
maximize profit. But what are those
maximizing quantities? To answer this,
we must consider the quantity of labor
and then the quantity of capital.
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The marginal product of labor (MPL) is the extra amount of output the
firm gets from one extra unit of labor, holding the amount of
capital fixed and is expressed using the production function:
MPL = F(K, L + 1) - F(K, L).
Most production functions have the property of
diminishing marginal product: holding the amount of capital
fixed, the marginal product of labor decreases as the amount of labor
increases.
The MPL is the change in output
when the labor input is increased
by 1 unit. As the amount of labor
increases, the production function
becomes flatter, indicating
diminishing marginal product.
Chapter Three
Y
F (K, L)
MPL
1
MPL
1
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L
When the competitive, profit-maximizing firm is
deciding whether to hire an additional unit of labor, it
considers how that decision would affect profits. It
therefore compares the extra revenue from the increased
production that results from the added labor to the extra
cost of higher spending on wages. The increase in revenue
from an additional unit of labor depends on two variables:
the marginal product of labor, and the price of the output.
Because an extra unit of labor produces MPL units of output
and each unit of output sells for P dollars, the extra revenue
is P × MPL. The extra cost of hiring one more unit of labor
is the wage W. Thus, the change in profit from hiring
an additional unit of labor is D Profit = D Revenue - D Cost
= (P × MPL) - W 18
Chapter Three
Thus, the firm’s demand for labor is determined by P × MPL = W,
or another way to express this is MPL = W/P, where W/P is the
real wage– the payment to labor measured in units of output rather
than in dollars. To maximize profit, the firm hires up to the point
where the extra revenue equals the real wage.
Units of
output
Real
wage
The MPL depends on the amount of labor.
The MPL curve slopes downward because
the MPL declines as L increases. This
schedule is also the firm’s labor demand
curve.
Quantity of labor demanded
MPL, labor demand
Chapter Three
Units of labor, L
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The firm decides how much capital to rent in the same way it decides
how much labor to hire. The marginal product of capital, or MPK,
is the amount of extra output the firm gets from an extra unit of
capital, holding the amount of labor constant:
MPK = F (K + 1, L) – F (K, L).
Thus, the MPK is the difference between the amount of output produced
with K+1 units of capital and that produced with K units of capital.
Like labor, capital is subject to diminishing marginal product.
The increase in profit from renting an additional machine is the extra
revenue from selling the output of that machine minus the machine’s
rental price: D Profit = D Revenue - D Cost = (P × MPK) – R.
To maximize profit, the firm continues to rent more capital until the MPK
falls to equal the real rental price, MPK = R/P.
The real rental price of capital is the rental price measured in units of
goods rather than in dollars. The firm demands each factor of production
until that factor’s marginal product falls to equal its real factor price.
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Chapter Three
The income that remains after firms have paid the factors of
production is the economic profit of the firms’ owners.
Real economic profit is: Economic Profit = Y - (MPL × L) - (MPK × K)
or to rearrange: Y = (MPL × L) - (MPK × K) + Economic Profit.
Total income is divided among the returns to labor, the returns to capital,
and economic profit.
How large is economic profit? If the production function has the property
of constant returns to scale, then economic profit is zero. This conclusion
follows from Euler’s theorem, which states that if the production function
has constant returns to scale, then
F(K,L) = (MPK × K) - (MPL × L)
If each factor of production is paid its marginal product, then the sum
of these factor payments equals total output. In other words, constant
returns to scale, profit maximization,and competition together imply that
economic profit is zero.
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Chapter Three
The Cobb-Douglas Production Function
Paul Douglas
Paul Douglas observed that the division of
national income between capital and labor has been
roughly constant over time. In other words,
the total income of workers and the total income
of capital owners grew at almost exactly the
same rate. He then wondered what conditions
might lead to constant factor shares. Cobb, a
mathematician, said that the production function
would need to have the property that:
Capital Income = MPK × K = α
Labor Income = MPL × L = (1- α) Y
Chapter Three
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Cobb-Douglas
Production Function
Capital Income = MPK × K = α Y
Labor Income = MPL × L = (1- α) Y
Chapter Three
α is a constant between zero and one and
measures capital and labors’ share of income.
Cobb showed that the function with this property is:
F (K, L) = A Kα L1- α
A is a parameter greater than zero that
measures the productivity of the
available technology.
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Next, consider the marginal products for the Cobb–Douglas
Production function. The marginal product of labor is:
MPL = (1- α) A Kα L–α or, MPL = (1- α) Y / L
and the marginal product of capital is:
MPL = α A Kα-1L1–α or, MPK = α Y/K
Let’s now understand the way these equations work.
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Properties of the Cobb–Douglas Production Funct
The Cobb–Douglas production function has constant returns to
scale (remember Mankiw’s Bakery). That is, if capital and
labor are increased by the same proportion, then output
increases by the same proportion as well.
Next, consider the marginal products for the Cobb–Douglas
production function. The MPL :
MPL = (1- α)Y/L
MPK= α A/ K
The MPL is proportional to output per worker, and the MPK is
proportional to output per unit of capital. Y/L is called average
labor productivity, and Y/K is called average capital
productivity. If the production function is Cobb–Douglas, then
the marginal productivity of a factor is proportional to its average
productivity.
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An increase in the amount of capital raises the MPL and
reduces the MPK. Similarly, an increase in the parameter
α
–α
MPL = (1- α) A K L or, MPL = (1- α) Y / L
and the marginal product of capital is:
MPL = α A Kα-1L1–α or, MPK = α Y/K
Let’s now understand the way these equations work.
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We can now confirm that if the factors (K and L) earn their
marginal products, then the parameter α indeed tells us how much
income goes to labor and capital. The total amount paid to labor
is MPL × L = (1- α). Therefore (1- α) is labor’s share of output Y.
Similarly, the total amount paid to capital, MPK × K is αY and α is
capital’s share of output. The ratio of labor income to capital
income is a constant (1- α)/ α, just as Douglas observed. The
factor shares depend only on the parameter α, not on the amounts
of capital or labor or on the state of technology as measured by the
parameter A.
Despite the many changes in the economy of the last 40 years,
this ratio has remained about the same (0.7). This division of income
is easily explained by a Cobb–Douglas production function, in which
the parameter α is about 0.3.
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Recall from Chapter 2, we
identified the four components
of GDP:
Y = C + I + G + NX
Total demand
for domestic
output (GDP)
is composed
of
Investment
spending by
businesses and
households
Net exports
or net foreign
demand
Consumption
Government
spending by
purchases of goods
households
and services
We are going to assume our economy is a closed economy, therefore it
eliminates the last-term net exports, NX. So, the three components of
GDP are Consumption (C), Investment (I) and Government purchases
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Chapter Three
(G). Let’s see how GDP is allocated among these three uses.
C = C(Y- T)
depends
on
consumption
spending by
households
Chapter Three
C
disposable
income
Y-T
The slope of the consumption function is
the MPC.
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The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is the amount by
which consumption changes when disposable income (Y - T)
increases by one dollar. To understand the MPC, consider a
shopping scenario. A person who loves to shop probably has a
large MPC, let’s say ($.99). This means that for every extra dollar
he or she earns after tax deductions, he or she spends $.99 of it.
The MPC measures the sensitivity of the change in one variable
(C) with respect to a change in the other variable (Y - T).
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I = I(r)
Investment
spending
depends
on
real interest rate
The quantity of investment depends on the real interest rate, which
measures the cost of the funds used to finance investment. When
studying the role of interest rates in the economy, economists
distinguish between the nominal interest rate and the real interest rate,
which is especially relevant when the overall level of prices is
changing. The nominal interest rate is the interest rate as usually
reported; it is the rate of interest that investors pay to borrow money.
The real interest rate is the nominal interest rate corrected for the
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effects
ofThree
inflation.
Chapter
The investment function relates the quantity of investment I to the real
interest rate r. Investment depends on the real interest rate because the
interest rate is the cost of borrowing. The investment function slopes
downward; when the interest rate rises, fewer investment projects are
profitable.
Real
interest
rate, r
Investment function, I(r)
Quantity of investment, I
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G=G
We take the level of government spending and
taxes as given. If government purchases equal taxes
minus transfers, then G = T, and the government has a
balanced budget. If G > T, then the government is
running a budget deficit. If G < T,
then the government is running a
budget surplus.
T=T
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The following equations summarize the discussion of the demand
for goods and services:
1) Y = C + I + G
2) C = C(Y - T)
3) I = I(r)
4) G = G
5) T = T
Demand for Economy’s Output
Consumption Function
Real Investment Function
Government Purchases
Taxes
The demand for the economy’s output comes from consumption,
investment, and government purchases. Consumption depends on
disposable income; investment depends on the real interest rate;
government purchases and taxes are the exogenous variables set by
fiscal policy makers.
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To this analysis, let’s add what we’ve learned about the supply
of goods and services earlier in the module. There we saw that the
factors of production and the production function determine the
quantity of output supplied to the economy:
Y = F (K, L)
=Y
Now, let’s combine these equations describing supply and demand
for output Y. Substituting all of our equations into the national
income accounts identity, we obtain:
Y = C(Y - T) + I(r) + G
and then, setting supply equal to demand, we obtain an equilibrium
condition:
Y = C(Y - T) + I(r) + G
This equation states that the supply of output equals its demand,
which is the sum of consumption, investment,
and government purchases.
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Y = C(Y - T) + I(r) + G
Notice that the interest rate r is the only variable not already determined
in the last equation. This is because the interest rate still has a key role
to play: it must adjust to ensure that the demand for goods equals the
supply. The greater the interest rate, the lower the level of investment.
and thus the lower the demand for goods and services, C + I + G.
If the interest rate is too high, investment is too low, and the demand
for output falls short of supply. If the interest rate is too low,
investment is too high, and the demand exceeds supply. At the
equilibrium interest rate, the demand for goods and services equals
the supply.
Let’s now examine how financial markets fit into the story.
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First, rewrite the national income accounts identity as Y - C - G = I.
The term Y - C - G is the output that remains after the demands of
consumers and the government have been satisfied; it is called national
saving or simply, saving (S). In this form, the national income accounts
identity shows that saving equals investment.
To understand this better, let’s split national saving into two parts-- one
examining the saving of the private sector and the other representing
the saving of the government.
(Y - T - C) + (T - G) = I
The term (Y - T - C) is disposable income minus consumption, which is
private saving. The term (T - G) is government revenue minus
government spending, which is public saving. National saving is the
sum of private and public saving.
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To see how the interest rate brings financial markets into equilibrium,
substitute the consumption function and the investment function into
the national income accounts identity:
Y - C (Y - T) - G = I(r)
Next, note that G and T are fixed by policy and Y is fixed by the factors
of production and the production function: Y - C (Y - T) - G = I(r)
S = I(r)
Real
Saving, S
The vertical line represents
interest
saving-- the supply of loanable
rate, r
funds. The downward-sloping
Equilibrium
line represents investment--the
interest
demand for loanable funds.
rate
The intersection determines the
equilibrium interest rate.
Chapter Three
Desired Investment, I(r)
Investment, Saving, I, S
S
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The model presented in this chapter represents the economy’s financial system with a single
market– the market for loanable funds. Those who have some income they don’t want to
consume immediately bring their saving to this market. Those who have investment projects
they want to undertake finance them by borrowing in this market. The interest rate adjusts to
bring saving and investment into balance. The actual financial system is a bit more complicated
than this description. As in this model, the goal of the system is to channel resources from
savers into various forms of investment. Two important markets are those of bonds and stocks.
Raising investment funds by issuing bonds is called debt finance, and raising funds by issuing
stock is called equity finance. Another part of the financial markets is the set of financial
intermediaries (i.e. banks, mutual funds, pension funds, and insurance companies) through
which households can indirectly provide resources for investment.
In 2008, the world financial system experienced a historic crisis. Many banks made loans to many
homeowners called mortgages, and had purchased many mortgage-backed securities (financial
instruments whose value derives from a pool of mortgages). A large decline in house prices
throughout the U.S., however, caused many homeowners to default on their mortgages, which
in turn led to large losses at these financial institutions. Many banks and other intermediaries
found themselves nearly bankrupt, and the financial system started having trouble performing
its key functions. To address the problem, the U.S. congress authorized the U.S. Treasury to
spend $700 billion, which was largely used to put further resources into the banking system.
In Chapter 11, we’ll address more fully the financial crisis of 2008. For our purposes in this chapter,
and as a building block for further analysis, representing the entire financial system by a single
market for loanable funds is a useful simplification.
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An Increase in Government Purchases: If we increase government
purchases by an amount DG, the immediate impact is to increase the
demand for goods and services by DG. But since total output is fixed
by the factors of production, the increase in government purchases must
be met by a decrease in some other category of demand. Because
disposable Y-T is unchanged, consumption is unchanged. The increase
in government purchases must be met by an equal decrease in investment.
To induce investment to fall, the interest rate must rise. Hence, the rise
in government purchases causes the interest rate to increase and investment
to decrease. Thus, government purchases are said to crowd out investment.
A Decrease in Taxes: The immediate impact of a tax cut is to raise
disposable income and thus to raise consumption. Disposable income
rises by DT, and consumption rises by an amount equal to DT times the
MPC. The higher the MPC, the greater the impact of the tax cut on
consumption. Like an increase in government purchases, tax cuts crowd
out investment and raise the interest rate.
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Chapter Three
Real
interest
rate, r
S'
A reduction in saving, possibly the
Saving, S result of a change in fiscal policy,
shifts the saving schedule to the left.
The new equilibrium is the point at
which the new saving schedule crosses
the investment schedule. A reduction
in saving lowers the amount of
investment and raises the interest rate.
Desired Investment, I(r)
Investment, Saving, I, S
S
Fiscal policy actions are said to crowd out investment.
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An increase in the demand for
Saving, S
investment goods shifts the investment
schedule to the right. At any given
interest rate, the amount of investment
is greater. The equilibrium moves
B
from A to B. Because the amount
of saving is fixed, the increase in
A
I2 investment demand raises
the interest rate while leaving
I1
the equilibrium
S Investment, Saving, I, S amount of investment
unchanged.
Now let’s see what happens to the interest
Real
interest
rate, r
rate and saving when saving depends on the
interest rate (upward-sloping saving (S) curve).
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S(r)
Real
interest
rate, r
Upward-sloping savings
B
A
I2
I1
Investment, Saving, I, S
When saving is positively related to the interest rate, as shown by
the upward-sloping S(r) curve, a rightward shift in the investment
schedule I(r), increases the interest rate and the amount of
investment. The higher interest rate induces people to increase
saving, which in turn allows investment to increase.
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43
Let’s review some of the simplifying
assumptions we have made in this chapter.
In the following chapters we relax
some of these assumptions to address a greater
range of questions.
We have: ignored the role of money,
assumed no international trade,
the labor force is fully employed,
the capital stock, the labor force,
and the production technology are fixed
and ignored the role of short-run sticky prices.
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Factors of production
Interest rate
Production function
Nominal interest rate
Constant returns to scale
Real interest rate
Factor prices
National saving
Competition
(saving)
Marginal product of labor (MPL)
Private saving
Diminishing marginal product
Public saving
Real wage
Loanable funds
Marginal product of capital (MPK)
Crowding out
Real rental price of capital
Economic profit versus accounting profit
Cobb–Douglas production function
Disposable income
Consumption function
Marginal
propensity to consume
Chapter Three
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